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Preventing Pollution Protects Children

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Mercury-Free Minnesota. GOALS: ... Sunday New York Times, October 12, 2003. EJAM Environmental Justice Advocates of Minnesota ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preventing Pollution Protects Children


1
Preventing Pollution Protects Children
  • Kathleen Schuler, MPH
  • Institute for Agriculture
  • Trade Policy
  • 612-870-3468
  • kschuler_at_iatp.org
  • www.iatp.org/foodandhealth

2
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3
Children vulnerable during brain development
  • In utero through age 2 years- critical for brain
    development
  • Critical sequence
  • Vulnerable to disruption
  • Size, timing, duration
  • influence impact
  • Downstream effects

4
Breast milk is healthy
  • Source of healthy omega 3 fatty acids for healthy
    brain development
  • Good for babys immune system
  • Mother-child bonding
  • Good for mothers health
  • Positive effects on intelligence and behavior

But breast milk contains contaminants
5
Fish are healthy
  • Dietary source of protein, Vitamin D and Omega-3
    fatty acids
  • Necessary for healthy brain development in
    children
  • But many fish contain contaminants

6
Breast milk and fish contain developmental
neurotoxicants
  • Lead
  • PCBs
  • Dioxins
  • Pesticides
  • Mercury
  • PBDEs (polybrominated diphenyl ethers)
  • Others manganese, nicotine, alcohol, solvents

7
Widespread contamination of these valuable food
sources negates some of the positive effects of
these foods.
We must eliminate these contaminants and make
these precious foods safe again.
8

From Factory to the Fetus Dioxin, PCBs PBDEs
Pathways of Exposure and Neurodevelopmental
Effects
AIR
Dioxins

PCBs Transformers Landfills Hazardous Waste Sites
Dioxins PVC Manufacturing Medical/Municipal
Incinerators
PCBs
SOIL


WATER
FOOD
PBDEs Electronics Bldg materials Transportation E
lec. appliances
9
Developmental Toxicity Data 2,863 HPV
Chemicals
Some Developmental Toxicity Data
12 Tested for Toxicity to the Developing Brain,
Nervous System
No Data On Developmental Toxicity
10
Problem with mercury and brominated flame
retardants
  • Exposure
  • Both pass through the placenta to the fetus
  • Both are passed to infants through breast milk
  • Both are neurotoxins
  • Both are widespread in breast milk and fish
  • Pollution prevention can reduce these
    contaminants in the environment and in these food
    sources
  • Current public policies do not adequately protect
    fetuses and young children.

11
Problem with Mercury
  • Potent neurotoxin.
  • We are learning that, as with lead, mercury
    effects are being detected at lower and lower
    levels.
  • Mercury passes through the placenta to the
    developing fetus and is also passed on to nursing
    infants in breast milk.
  • New EPA estimates put 630,000 newborns a year at
    risk for adverse effects on development due to
    mothers mercury body burden.
  • Fish consumption is a key route of exposure.

12

Mercury Pollution

Wet Deposition
Particulates Vapor
Combustion
Dry Deposition

Volcanoes
Industry Incinerators
Landfills
Farming

WasteWater Releases

Ground-water Flow
Volatilization
Pesticides Fertilizers
Runoff


Methylation Hg to HgCH3
Rain Streams to Groundwater
Sedimentation
to Streams, lakes, vegetation, soil
Bioaccumulation in Fish
13
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MercuryDeclining Threshold of Harm
Level associated with
harmful effect
Regulatory standard

(maximum safe exposure or high
end exposure from allowed fish
contamination)
(micrograms/kg/day Hg)
DAILY INTAKE
FDA
WHO
ATSDR
EPA
YEAR
15
MercuryEffects of Low Dose Prenatal Exposure
Children with high prenatal mercury exposure
Children with low prenatal mercury exposure
lt 15
30-50
15-30
gt50 µg/l
Children with lowest scores at age 7 years
Figure shows prenatal mercury exposure levels of
Faroese children with scores in the lowest
quartile after adjustment for cofounders. For
each of the five major cognitive functions, one
neuropsychological test with a high psychometric
validity was selected.
Source Grandjean, et. al., "Cognitive Deficit in
7-year-Old Children with Prenatal Exposure to
Methylmercury", Neurotoxicology and Teratology,
Vol. 19, No. 6, 1997
16
Mercury Exposures
  • Advised Exposure Limit
  • EPA Reference Dose (safe upper limit) 0.1
    microgram/kilogram/day
  • Equivalent consumption limit
  • Women 7 oz. tuna/week
  • Child 1 oz. tuna per 20 lb. body weight/week

17
Mercury Exposures
  • Current exposures
  • About 16 of women of reproductive age exceed
    Reference Dose (RfD)
  • 50 of women who eat fish exceed RfD on any given
    day
  • Higher risk Subsistence fishers, immigrants,
    American Indians

18
Exposure reduction
  • Advise women of childbearing age and young
    children to avoid high mercury fish.
  • Women can reduce their body burden before
    becoming pregnant.
  • Safe fish consumption is complicated!
  • Farmed versus wild
  • Minnesota fish vs commercial
  • Balance sustainability vs contamination
  • Depends on body weight

19
  • From IATP
  • For women of childbearing age and children
  • Combines information on sustainability and
    contaminants
  • Handy tear-off pocket guide

20
Minnesota Health Dept. Advice
http//www.health.state.mn.us/divs/eh/fish/index.h
tml
21
What can we do about fish contaminants?
  • Replace fossil-fuel based energy with renewable
    sources like solar wind
  • More aggressively regulate coal plants and other
    polluting industries
  • Phase-out use of mercury in products, including
    in vaccines and dental amalgams
  • Public health Burden of proof

22
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23
Mercury Pollution
  • Current administration proposals delay
    significant mercury reductions for 10 years.
  • Clean Air Act - 70 reduction by 2008
  • Clear Skies Initiative - 69 reduction by 2018
  • Proposed MACT rules for coal plants align with
    Clear Skies and allow 7X Hg pollution of Clean
    Air Act

We must prevent mercury pollution to protect
public health!
24
Mercury-Free Minnesota
  • GOALS
  • Establish enforceable mercury reduction targets
    based on a 90 reduction by 2010, and virtual
    elimination by 2020
  • Prohibit sales of motor vehicles with mercury
    components
  • Phase out mercury in products, including
    vaccines
  • Broaden mercury labeling and disposal laws to
    ensure removal from the solid waste stream of
    products that contain mercury, including dental
    amalgams.

Coalition of 20 orgs. www.mercuryfreemn.org
25
PBDEspolybrominated diphenyl ethers(brominated
flame retardants)
26
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs)
  • PCB-like persistent, bioaccumulative, toxic
  • Resist degradation high boiling point, low vapor
    pressure, low water solubility
  • Lipophilic
  • Globally transported
  • Bind to particles - accumulate in sediments
  • Most common commerical types
  • Deca-BDE- used in thermoplastics textiles
  • Octo-BDE- used in plastics
  • Penta-BDE- used in polyurethane foam (North
    America- 98 of global demand)

27
Brominated Flame Retardants (BFRs) Robert Hale,
VA Inst. Of Marine Science
Added to reduce fire-hazard associated with our
wide use of flammable polymers textiles
BFR use saves Lives Property Environmental damage
28
Worldwide Market
29
Problem with brominated flame retardants (PBDEs)
  • Per animal studies neurotoxic, disrupt thyroid
    and toxic to liver
  • Chemically similar to PCBs, which are toxic,
    persistent and bioccumulative
  • Levels increasing in environment and biota
  • Fish consumption is a key route of exposure.
  • New data show that air (inhalation) exposure may
    also be important

30
PBDE Levels in Humans
Year
PBDE, polybrominated diphenylethers. (She et al.,
2001)
31
Trends of BDEs in Canadian human milks1982-2002
From Ryan and Patry 2002
32
U.S. Fish Levels Increasing Rapidly Over
Time Robert Hale, VA Inst. Of Marine Science
100-fold increase
33
Mean concentrations of total PBDEs detected in
Lake Ontario lake trout between 1978 and 1998
(0.54-178ng/g), and the amount of bromine used
globally for BFR production between 1965 and 1996
(6000-89000 tons)(Mehran Alee, Canadian National
Water Research Inst.)
1965
1998
34
Organohalogen Compounds in Breast Milk in Sweden
PCB, polychlorinated biphenyl PCDD,
polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin PCDF,
polychlorinated dibenzofuran PBDE,
polybromonated diphenylether TEQ, toxic equiv.
35
PCBs PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL EFFECTS
Infant Birth weight, head circumference,
gestational age, motor immaturity, poor lability,
startle reflex Early Childhood Memory,
attention, verbal ability, information
processing, psychomotor development, sustained
activity, high level play, withdrawn, depressed
behavior, hyperactivity Preteen Word and reading
comprehension, full scale and verbal IQ, memory
and attention
36
PCBs Inadequate Margin of Safety
PCB
BLOOD LEVELS
(ppb)
REPORTED
REPORTED
HUMAN
HEALTH EFFECTS
IN OFFSPRING
EXPOSURES
Great Lakes
fish eaters
Great Lakes
non-fish eaters
Decreased reflexes, memory, IQ, attention,
visual discrimination
Midwest and

Northeast US women
Michigan mothers
North Carolina mothers
Decreased attention, cognitive ability, high
level play, psychomotor development
Increased withdrawn/depressed, increased
hyperactivity.
Wisconsin women
Dutch mothers
37
Lessons from PCBs
  • Chemically similar to PCBs
  • Neurotoxic
  • Economic value in industrial use
  • Pollution growing
  • Widespread exposure in fish
  • Opportunity for less toxic alternatives
  • Regulation can reduce exposure

38
Regulatory Actions
  • EU banned penta and octa. Considering deca ban.
  • Sweden, Germany and Netherlands voluntary
    agreements with industry
  • Germany restricted through Dioxin Ordinance
  • CA ban on penta and octa by 2008.

39
U.S. Industry actions
  • EPA negotiated with Great Lakes Chemical, the
    only US manufacturer of penta and octa, a
    phase-out by 2005.
  • Computer electronics companies are using
    alternatives, Ericsson, IBM, Apple, Intel, Sony,
    Motorola, Panasonic, Phillips.
  • IKEA, Crate Barrel and Eddie Bauer are
    requesting PBDE-free polyurethane foam from their
    manufacturer Hickory Springs.

40
States proposing bans
  • There is no regulation of PBDEs by EPA.
  • In the absence of EPA regulations, other states
    are joining California in banning PBDEs-
    legislation being introduced in
  • Michigan -Hawaii
  • Maryland -Washington
  • Maine -New York
  • Minnesota

41
Minnesotas Proposed law to ban PBDE flame
retardants
  • SF 2193 would ban in all products sold or
    manufactured in Minnesota
  • Penta and octa by 2006
  • Deca by 2008
  • Exempts plastics recyclers

42
Trends of BDEs in human milk (Mehran Alee,
Canadian National Water Research Inst.)
Betts Env Sci Technol Dec, 2001
43
Precautionary Principle
  • When an activity raises threats of harm to the
    environment or human health, precautionary
    measures should be taken even if some cause and
    effect relationships are not fully established
    scientifically.
  • Science and Environmental Health Network

44
Environmental Justice
  • everyone regardless of race, culture or income,
    enjoys the same degree of protection from
    environmental and health hazards and equal access
    to the decision-making process to have a healthy
    environment in which to live, learn and work
  • Christine Todd Whitman, EPA Administrator

45
Environmental injustice
  • Asthma- EPA reports Children of color and low
    income kids are more likely to have had an asthma
    attack in past 12 months.
  • 8 black non-Hispanic low income
  • 6 white non-Hispanic low income
  • 5 of Hispanic low income
  • 6 all low income
  • 5 all non-low income

46
Environmental injustice
  • Lead in blood- EPA reports Children of color and
    low income kids are at greater risk for high
    blood lead. In 1999-2000
  • Median blood lead kids ages 1-5 2.2 ug/dL
  • Low-income kids 2.8 ug/dL
  • Non-low income kids 1.9 ug/dL
  • ALL Black non-Hispanic kids 2.8 ug/dL
  • ALL white non-Hispanic kids 2.1 ug/dL
  • ALL Hispanic kids 2.0 ug/dL

47
Unequal exposures
  • Air pollution diesel fumes, particulates
  • Industrial emissions
  • Incinerators
  • Superfund sites
  • Occupational risks
  • School conditions
  • Housing issues

48
Stress impacts health!
GHETTO MIASMA Enough To Make You Sick? By
Helen Epstein Sunday New York Times, October 12,
2003
49
EJAM Environmental Justice Advocates of Minnesota
  • MissionTo advocate for fair treatment
    and meaningful involvement of communities of
    color and low income communities in the
    development, implementation, and enforcement of
    environmental laws, regulation, and policies for
    the purpose of eliminating minority health
    disparities
  • http//www.ejadvocates-mn.us/

50
healthy planet healthy families
For more information, see www.iatp.org/foodandheal
th or contact Kathleen Schuler at 612-870-3468 or
kschuler_at_iatp.org
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